Professor Subra Suresh, an eminent American scientist, engineer and entrepreneur chosen in 2010 by then-US President Barack Obama to lead the US National Science Foundation (NSF), will succeed Professor Bertil Andersson as the 4th President of Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore).Prof Suresh will begin his presidency on 1 January 2018, when Prof Andersson retires from the role he has held since 2011.NTU Singapore is one of the world's leading universities recognised by several independent global academic ranking organisations and metrics. In its QS World University Rankings this year, the Quacquarelli Symonds group placed NTU 11th in the world and the best in Asia. Today, NTU was again placed the world's best young university (under 50 years old) by QS for the fourth consecutive year. It was also named the world's fastest rising young university by Times Higher Education in 2015. NTU's campus is frequently named among the Top 15 most beautiful university campuses in the world.Prof Suresh joins NTU from Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) where he was President for the last four years. Carnegie Mellon has been credited for its contribution to the transformation of the city of Pittsburgh from primarily a steel producer to a diverse economy through advances in technology, services and medicine. A current independent director of HP Inc, Palo Alto and an advisor to the senior leadership of Siemens AG, Germany on science, technology and innovation, he served as Director of the NSF from 2010 to 2013. In that leadership role, he oversaw an annual budget of US$7 billion that supports fundamental research and innovation in all fields of science and engineering and related education in more than 2,000 institutions across the US and in a number of global research facilities from the Arctic to Antarctica. Before NSF, he was Dean of Engineering and Vannevar Bush Professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).Chairman of the NTU Board of Trustees, Mr Koh Boon Hwee (Chairman of Agilent Technologies, Inc., former Chairman of both Singapore Airlines and DBS Bank), announced Prof Suresh's appointment in an email to NTU faculty, staff, students and alumni this afternoon. He said that succession planning started last year and in line with international best practices of universities, NTU had conducted a global search for its next president in Singapore and internationally. The eight-member search committee chaired by Mr Koh unanimously selected Prof Suresh for the top role at NTU, and his appointment has been strongly endorsed by all members of the NTU Board of Trustees.Mr Koh said:"NTU has made phenomenal progress under Prof Andersson's leadership as a university that develops well-rounded graduates and produces globally recognised research. The appointment of the next President is crucial to continue that momentum and to elevate NTU in its next significant phase of growth and development. A world-class university, NTU will need a leader with vision, global stature, a thorough understanding of the environment in which it operates, and the larger international backdrop that the university and Singapore fit into. Prof Suresh more than matches all these criteria."Prof Suresh understands the Singapore higher education and research systems, as well as those in North America, Europe, China and India, having actively engaged with various public and private agencies and boards, and as a member of a number of national academies of science and engineering. He is an educator, scientist, advisor, inventor, entrepreneur and leader all rolled into one. The Board of Trustees and I are delighted that he has agreed to take the top job to lead NTU in its next phase of development."

25 years of relations in SingaporeOn his appointment as the fourth President of NTU, Prof Suresh said:"I have had a very special affinity for Singapore and numerous interactions with colleagues here in academia, industry and government. It has been a privilege to witness and also participate in the impressive rise of both Singapore and NTU on the international stage."I am excited to have the honour of leading NTU, with its rich history, heritage and beautiful, cosmopolitan campus in a vibrant city state serving as a global hub for finance, commerce, education, research and culture at the crossroads of Asia, at a time when Asia is poised to take a significant leadership role in shaping the 21st century. I look forward to working with the NTU community, including its outstanding faculty and administrative staff, 200,000+ global alumni, trustees, and exceptional students to realise the great opportunities that lie ahead. I am also grateful to Prof Andersson for his very impactful leadership of NTU for the past six years."Prof Suresh has had numerous high-level interactions with Singapore for nearly a quarter century. He has served as a consultant to the National Science and Technology Board, on the Advisory Boards or Councils of A*STAR Institutes and several schools at the National University of Singapore. He held the inaugural Tan Chin Tuan Centennial Chair for visiting appointments at the National University of Singapore from 2006 to 2010.Prof Suresh was the principal faculty coordinator from MIT for the formation of the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology (SMART) centre in 2006. SMART is the first centre in the National Research Foundation's Campus for Research Excellence and Technological Enterprise (CREATE). In this capacity, he worked closely with the MIT and Singapore research communities, and crystallised and presented the vision for the SMART centre and its role in the CREATE campus in July 2006 to the Research, Innovation and Enterprise Council (RIEC), chaired by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.While serving as Dean of Engineering at MIT, Prof Suresh continued his scholarly work in partnership with colleagues from NUS and NTU in the first SMART centre programme on infectious diseases, which led to several dozen research articles in leading international journals.For the past several years, he has served as a member of both the Academic Research Council and the International Academic Advisory Panel of Singapore's Ministry of Education.

Achievements at Carnegie MellonAt Carnegie Mellon, Prof Suresh launched a historic campus infrastructure development effort including the creation of a new quadrangle to house the largest building on campus partly funded by a US$67 million gift from an alumnus. Supported by a US$31 million gift from another alumnus, he worked with the campus community to establish the Swartz Centre for Entrepreneurship. Under his leadership, these initiatives were supported by four of the most successful fundraising years in the university's history, which also saw an increase of 55% in the university's total endowment. He worked with the university community to secure more than US$200 million in new permanent endowment specifically for Presidential Fellowships and Scholarships, a programme he established in 2014 to provide financial support to top students.During President Suresh's tenure, CMU assembled the most diverse senior leadership team in the university's history; established a strategic plan through an inclusive campus-wide process that placed particular emphasis on enhancing the campus experience as well as the health and wellness of students; recruited a record proportion of outstanding women first-year undergraduate students in computer science and engineering (at levels several times greater than the average for US universities in these areas where women have been traditionally underrepresented); and founded and chaired the Global Learning Council as an international forum to help improve learning outcomes through technology.​

Welcome from the current NTU PresidentCurrent President of NTU, Prof Andersson said:"I warmly welcome Prof Suresh and hope that he will enjoy his time here as NTU President as much as I have. It has been a great honour and I have many special memories of my 10 years in this remarkable place. I know the future leadership of NTU is in safe hands and I look forward to working with Prof Suresh and the NTU Board of Trustees to ensure a smooth transition. Wherever I am in the world in the future, I will continue to be a proud ambassador of NTU and Singapore."Prof Andersson, an eminent biochemist and winner of the prestigious Wilhelm Exner Medal has worked in Singapore for over 10 years. He joined NTU in 2007 as its first Provost and was appointed President in 2011. Under his leadership, NTU jumped from 74th position in 2010 to an all-time high of No. 11 globally to be the highest placed Asian university in the QS World University Rankings this year.NTU now leads the top Asian universities in normalised research citation impact (Clarivate Analytics' InCites 2015), and in the last five years, NTU has established joint labs on its campus with leading international organisations such as Rolls Royce, BMW, Siemens, Johnson Matthey, Lockheed Martin and Singapore's ST Engineering.A fellow of Imperial College London, Prof Andersson, spearheaded the establishment of NTU's joint medical school with Imperial College, whose first batch of medical students will ​graduate in July 2018. He was recognised by the President of Singapore with the 2016 President's Science and Technology Medal and has advanced education practices through the 'flipped classroom' pedagogical approach exemplified through NTU's iconic Hive building, and through an emphasis on continual lifelong education.Prof Andersson has also overseen the rapid physical transformation of the NTU main campus and the development of a second clinical medicine campus at Novena, providing a conducive environment for education, research and inter-disciplinary interactions.

​Born in India, Prof Suresh graduated from high school at 15 and received his Bachelor degree (First Class) with distinction in technology from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) in Madras. He received a master's degree from Iowa State University and went on to complete his doctorate in mechanical engineering from MIT in just two years. Following postdoctoral research at the University of California, Berkeley, and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, he joined the faculty of engineering at Brown University in 1983. Prof Suresh returned to MIT in 1993 as the R.P. Simmons Professor and served as Head of Department of Materials Science and Engineering from 2000 to 2006. He was Dean of Engineering at MIT from 2007 to 2010. Prof Suresh was appointed by then-US President Barack Obama in 2010 to lead NSF and was unanimously confirmed by the US Senate. He served as President of Carnegie Mellon University from 2013 to 2017.

Prof Suresh holds the distinction of being the only university president elected to all three US national academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, and is one of the few elected foreign members of the Chinese Academy of Sciences. He is an elected member of 15 science and/or engineering academies based in the US, China, France, India, Sweden, Germany, Italy and Spain. He is a recipient of 12 honorary doctorates from universities around the world including Zhejiang University, China; Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne (EPFL), Switzerland; Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden; Warwick University, UK; St. Petersburg Polytechnic University, Russia; Dartmouth College, USA, and his alma mater, the Indian Institute of Technology, Madras. In 2011, Prof Suresh was awarded the Padma Shri, one of the highest civilian honours, by the President of India.

He is the author or co-author of more than 250 research articles in international journals, co-editor of five books, and co-inventor on 25 US and international patent applications. He has written three books and among them, Fatigue of Materials and Thin Film Materials have been translated into Chinese and are used as textbooks for postgraduate students.

Prof Suresh is one of the few elected foreign members in the Chinese Academy of Sciences. He was a member of an advisory group to the Governor of Guangdong Province from 2014 to2016, for technology and industry matters. His connections with China go back some 25 years when his book Fatigue of Materials was first translated into Chinese, and he has collaborated in research with various Chinese scientists. Among them was a highly-cited paper on nano-twinned materials published in Science.

Prof Suresh has taught many Chinese students and scholars in the past 30 years. One of his first students, when he was a young assistant professor at Brown University in 1984, was Yang Wei, who went on to become President of Zhejiang University where Prof Suresh received an honorary degree in 2013 - a memorable occasion for him. Prof Yang is now the president of National Natural Sciences Foundation, China's top science agency. Prof Suresh was made an honorary professor at Xi'an Jiaotong University in 2013 and at the University of Science and Technology in 2014.

Prof Suresh is married to Mary Delmar Suresh, a public health consultant. They have two daughters, Nina, a medical doctor, and Meera, who is a global health professional at a non-profit organisation in the US.

​A research-intensive public university, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore (NTU Singapore) has 33,000 undergraduate and postgraduate students in the colleges of Engineering, Business, Science and Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences, and its Interdisciplinary Graduate School. NTU's Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine was set up jointly with Imperial College London.NTU is also home to world-class autonomous institutes – the National Institute of Education, S Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Earth Observatory of Singapore, and Singapore Centre for Environmental Life Sciences Engineering – and various leading research centres such as the Nanyang Environment & Water Research Institute (NEWRI), Energy Research Institute @ NTU (ERI@N) and the Institute on Asian Consumer Insight (ACI).​Ranked among the top universities in the world, NTU has also been placed the world's top young university for the last four consecutive years. NTU also has a second campus in Novena, Singapore's medical district.For more information, visit www.ntu.edu.sg